CURRENTMOODGIRL - Side Split
Side Split
CURRENTMOODGIRL
December 6, 2021
December 6, 2021
December 1, 2021
November 11, 2021
November 2, 2021
October 26, 2021
October 20, 2021
September 13, 2021
August 1, 2021
July 10, 2021
June 30, 2021
March 25, 2019
March 25, 2019
May 9, 2019
May 10, 2019
May 13, 2019
May 28, 2019
May 29, 2019
June 11, 2019
June 24, 2019
June 25, 2019
June 27, 2019
July 2, 2019
July 2, 2019
July 12, 2019
July 30, 2019
August 8, 2019
August 23, 2019
August 29, 2019
September 5, 2019
September 10, 2019
September 20, 2019
September 24, 2019
September 30, 2019
October 4, 2019
October 9, 2019
October 10, 2019
October 12, 2019
October 14, 2019
October 14, 2019
October 26, 2019
October 30, 2019
November 4, 2019
November 5, 2019
November 6, 2019
November 11, 2019
November 20, 2019
November 25, 2019
November 27, 2019
December 2, 2019
December 5, 2019
December 20, 2019
December 21, 2019
December 24, 2019
January 7, 2020
January 10, 2020
January 17, 2020
January 19, 2020
January 22, 2020
January 23, 2020
January 31, 2020
February 4, 2020
February 7, 2020
February 17, 2020
February 19, 2020
February 20, 2020
February 29, 2020
March 7, 2020
March 12, 2020
March 13, 2020
March 15, 2020
March 20, 2020
March 20, 2020
March 20, 2020
March 24, 2020
March 27, 2020
March 29, 2020
March 31, 2020
April 6, 2020
April 13, 2020
April 13, 2020
April 18, 2020
April 23, 2020
April 24, 2020
May 1, 2020
May 1, 2020
May 1, 2020
May 5, 2020
May 6, 2020
May 7, 2020
May 11, 2020
May 13, 2020
Liam Murphy
November 2, 2024
Tracks in this feature
Tracks in this release
Wearing a waterproof Kappa coat, Hello Kitty headphones and donning a stylish Bassett Hound bag, Manchester’s own CURRENTMOODGIRL strikes poses that seem to both patronise and bolster the apocalyptic bass tones that emerge from behind her as she owns The Shacklewell Arms stage. The experimental pop musician flits from throwing serious Bjorkian vocals to letting her dog-bag bark and bite at the legs of patrons in quick succession.
But this marked contrast can also be found in her music, as she goes from new single Frogspawn – a menacing acid-bubblegum track where impish voices chant about the lifecycle of pondlife – to Sleepless 111 – a cut from her fantastic 2021 release Side Split that finds her bend her vocals in a melancholy slow-walk ballad.
The stage is set for HYPER GAL, a title under which a noise artist and visual artist have created a blaring punk-y sound driven for the most part by crunchy piano samples and relentlessly stubborn drum patterns.
Their live performance sees this formula – at its pinnacle on latest release After Image – exquisitely presented, with Kurumi Kadoya thrashing the drums after setting each cataclysmic key melody in motion on a small MIDI keyboard. Koharu Ishida pierces the mulched electronic sound and thundering drums with sharp vocal intonations.
Things feel purposely crude – the band themselves describe their “limited palette” in writing accompanying the latest release – and from this place the duo are able to produce some undeniably galvanising moments. From set opener dot dot dot where the performers bring their drawling sound to life to the crude utopian melodies blaring through The Shacklewell Arms as OVER FUSSY finds Ishida yelping with an indignant tone through the waves of no wave dissonance.
The pair only go from strength to strength as the set proceeds and the crowd understands the brute fact of their stripped-down and unpolished sound when reproduced live. Kadoya hitches her foot up onto the snare drum in one song to achieve a hollow thud and bounce the song forward with a DIY gumption. At one point, the Shacklewell back room is bathed in a red glow and the splanchnic nature of the now-confidentially cavorting sound is revealed. In the belly of the bellicose beast.
The base nature of HYPER GAL’s sound is executed as it should be in the live space. Clean of any pomp or pretension, the shrillness of the vocals and the inebriated instrumentation is left to stumble and charge unpredictably. The crowd, wary of the band’s no wave sound, work themselves into a lather as two artists contribute frantically to a frustrated, puerile neo-punk mess.